4.7 Article

Comparative life cycle environmental impact assessment of renewable electricity generation systems: A practical approach towards Europe, North America and Oceania

Journal

RENEWABLE ENERGY
Volume 193, Issue -, Pages 1106-1120

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.renene.2022.05.031

Keywords

Renewable -energy technologies; Life -cycle assessment; Environmental performance; Greenhouse -gas emission; Uncertainty analysis

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The choice of power plants in different nations depends on the availability, abundance, and reliability of resources. Renewable energy generation systems provide a more sustainable solution than fossil fuels, but they also have overall environmental impacts. This paper addresses the environmental effects caused by different types of renewable energy generation systems through life-cycle impact analysis. A comparative study is carried out among wind, photovoltaic, biomass, and hydro power. The key findings reveal the environmental impacts of different technologies and conclude that hydropower plants are more environment-friendly.
The choice of a power plant in different nations depends on the required resources availability, abun-dance, and reliability. It is evident that renewable energy generation resources provide a more sus-tainable solution than the fossil fuels. However, as a complete system, renewable energy generation systems also have some overall environmental impacts on humankind and ecosystems. The main objective of this paper is to addresses the environmental effects caused by different types of renewable energy generation systems through process-based life-cycle impact analysis. A comparative study is carried out among different renewable energy generation technologies which include wind, photovol-taic, biomass, and hydro power. Life-cycle impact analysis has been carried out by Institute of Envi-ronmental Sciences (CML), Eco-indicator 99, Cumulative Energy Demand (CED) and Ecopoints 97 approaches. The superiority of this work is creating a comprehensive life-cycle inventory following a reliable global database, assessing the impacts for about 10 midpoint impact categories and three endpoint indicators, and taking account of the fossil-fuel-based energy consumption rate of each plant. The key findings reveal that photovoltaic power plants have the highest environmental impacts in the types of ozone layer depletion, fresh water aquatic ecotoxicity and marine aquatic ecotoxicity, while biomass plants impact on the categories of abiotic depletion, global warming, photochemical oxidation, acidification, and eutrophication. Moreover, the wind power plants have the more significant environ-mental effect on human toxicity and terrestrial ecotoxicity types. Overall, hydropower plants are found to be much more environment-friendly than other renewable electricity generation systems.(c) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available